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Mark Steyn

The Spirit of Geert Wilders

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When I was asked to write a foreword to Geert Wilders' new book, my first reaction, to be honest, was to pass. Mr. Wilders lives under 24/7 armed guard because significant numbers of motivated people wish to kill him, and it seemed to me, as someone who's attracted more than enough homicidal attention over the years, that sharing space in these pages was likely to lead to an uptick in my own death threats. Who needs it? Why not just plead too crowded a schedule and suggest the author try elsewhere? I would imagine Geert Wilders gets quite a lot of this. And then I took a stroll in the woods, and felt vaguely ashamed at the ease with which I was willing to hand a small victory to his enemies. After I saw off the Islamic enforcers in my own country, their frontman crowed to The Canadian Arab News that, even though the Canadian Islamic Congress had struck out in three different jurisdictions in their attempt to criminalize my writing about Islam, the lawsuits had cost my magazine (he boasted) two million bucks, and thereby "attained our strategic objective — to increase the cost of publishing anti-Islamic material." In the Netherlands, Mr. Wilders' foes, whether murderous jihadists or the multicultural establishment, share the same "strategic objective" — to increase the cost of associating with him beyond that which most people are willing to bear. It is not easy to be Geert Wilders. He has spent almost a decade in a strange, claustrophobic, transient, and tenuous existence little different from kidnap victims or, in his words, a political prisoner. He is under round-the-clock guard because of explicit threats to murder him by Muslim extremists. Yet he's the one who gets put on trial for incitement.

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Steyn on America

America's Slow Suicide

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Mark tells Charles Adler why he believes America is in the midst of a slow suicide.

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SteynPosts

Dutch courage

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Geert Wilders' new book, Marked For Death, is a terrific read in its own right, but it also comes with a foreword by Mark setting the scene for Mr Wilders' sobering account of Islam's war against him and the wider west. And, if you order it from the SteynOnline bookstore, Mark will be happy to sign it for you.

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In the News

Welcome to Goldwater!

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An introduction to the Goldwater Institute narrated by Mark...

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Steynamite in Toronto!

Steynamite spared no sacred cows

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(VIDEO) Michael Coren provides the highlights of what proved to be an unforgettable night at the Metro Toronto Convention Centre...

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In the Corner

Mrs. Warren's Positionality

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In the week that Newsweek hailed Obama as America's first Gay-for-Pay president, let us not forget another shatterer of the glass ceiling – Harvard Law's "first woman of color, Elizabeth Warren"...

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In the Corner

Moon Over Cleveland

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I think Tammy Bruce's "Gay For Pay" line is the all-time greatest distillation of Obama's "evolution", but I'm not sure I share Tammy's conviction that this is all about ensuring a revenue stream for post-presidential legacy projects and golfing vacations. Mickey Kaus has an alternative scenario...

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In the Corner

Target-Rich Environment

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This seems symbolic of something or other: The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, a division of the Interior Department, is considering loosening regulations on the killing of bald eagles

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Happy Warrior

Middle Class Mick

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Midway through a Julie Burchill column in the Guardian bemoaning the Queen's Diamond Jubilee, I was startled to learn the following: Although fewer than 10 percent of British children attend private schools, their alumni make up over 60 percent of the acts on the U.K. pop charts. Twenty years ago, it was 1 percent. There's always been a bit of this, of course: Mick Jagger went to the London School of Economics and made more money singing the songs of hardscrabble Mississippi bluesmen than the ...

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